Get Your Money Out of Morgan Stanley—Fast!

With the stock price of Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) inches from its Armageddon lows of Oct. 2008, whispers of the imminent overnight collapse of
this U.S. broker-dealer begin to surface. Client funds, again, are at risk.

“I’m hearing rumors that another major financial house is going to implode,” says TruNews host Rick Wiles. In fact, the name I’ve been given
is Morgan Stanley . . .

“It’s going to be put on the sacrificial alter by the financial elite.”

Well this is interesting, and possibly we could be seeing the next Lehman Brothers. With the stock market being almost completely run on rumors these
days, even a "hint" of collapse could send Morgan Stanley to ruin.

I don't know if anyone on ATS has sold shares via Morgan Stanley, but if you have, could you tell us if everything went smoothly?

The timing of the Bloomberg article is no coincidence. Michael Bloomberg is only doing his part for the global banking cartel by tipping off that
Morgan Stanley is ready for the “sacrificial alter.” Get your money out.

(1) In early May, Munger told CNBC, “I think gold is a great thing to sow in to your garments if you’re a Jewish family in Vienna in 1939, but I
think civilized people don’t buy gold.” George Soros is a Jew, living in Hungary during the rise of the Third Reich.

(2) You can’t trust anybody and the entire system is collapsing. What’s the takeaway from this? It’s to make sure you have every penny in your
pocket. —Gerald Celente, after losing 20 percent of his allocated brokerage account with MF Global.

“If you don’t understand what ‘get the hell out’ means, there’s not much I can do for you.” —Ann Barnhardt, after reviewing an appeals
court ruling in the case of Sentinal Management Group, ruling that clients funds can be used to settle secured loans initiated through the banking
industry.

I sure don't like this within context of the DHS buying over a billion hollow points, portable check point kiosks and riot gear. Soros knows. Others
know. The rest of us are in the dark and on our own. I think I need to make a Costco run tomorrow.

This doesn't surprise me in the least.
Around five years ago I closed my accounts with the bank. People even in my own family thought I was "paranoid." Those same people have finally
begun to wake up.
Very sad to think of all the people who will be caught unawares.

Took a quick look at MS, and I'm not seeing any of the tell tale signs of collapse like with Lehman or Bear. Options open interest is pretty normal
if not a little weighted toward the expected to go up call side as far out as January. Short interest seems a little higher than normal, but not too
bad for a stock on the low side of it's 52 week range. I'm just not seeing eminent demise here.

I'm not trying to shoot the OP thesis down, but I'm not seeing any of the things I would expect for a bank on the ropes.

That being said I think anyone with any material amount of money in any broker who has operations in London is stupid until the issues from MF Global
have been addressed. I'd love to see another fall of 08 in the banking sector, but not seeing anything that looks like eminent demise.

“I’m hearing rumors that another major financial house is going to implode,” says TruNews host Rick Wiles. In fact, the name I’ve been
given is Morgan Stanley . . . Source

A google search reveals that amongst other imaginative warnings, on June 13th, Rick Wiles' intel issued a heads-up about the [possible]
detonation of a 'stolen' nuclear bomb during the opening ceremonies of the 2012 Olympics.

Trunews promotes itself as a Christian news network: "Trunews is the only nightly newscast reporting the countdown to the Second Coming of Jesus
Christ."

Host Rick Wiles serves up a blend of hard-shell fundamentalism and Jonesian conspiracy theory that is unlikely to influence the markets imho.

It will just be a dog and pony show...Here look at my left hand Morgan Stanley collapsing while my right hand buys up all their assests at pennies on
the dollar and ultimatley owned by the same cartel.

We need real financial reform not little tricks to keep the masses distracted for a few more months!!!

Seeing as how Morgan Stanley is one of the founding fathers of the banking cartels along with the Rothchilds and Rockerfellers..one has to wonder what
this actually means in that way if this is correct.

Curious to say the least....lets keep our peepers open to the sideshow....if this is true the implications do not stop with Morgan Stanley...and if it
does fall through, i guarentee that the family that owns it will be in a position to not feel much from this as it was likely preplanned.

When one of those executives of Morgan Stanley commits suicide, you know the ship is going down fast. until then, I probably wouldn't worry about it
too much. Stock price doesn't really mean MS is going down, it could be just the market doesn't see MS doing any good investing for
shareholders.

I've got accounts at MS. My brother in law works there. I don't own any MS stock and I'm not concerned about the accounts.

With regards to an investors holdings when the investment house goes bust, you might want to read the following: finance.yahoo.com...

For starters, cash is held apart from the firm's holdings to protect the individuals. Stocks held in other companies are also still owned by the
investor. The only thing you have trouble unloading are investments in the investment bank itself - stock, funds etc.

MF global was an investment fund. If you were invested in Morgan Stanley funds, and the company went under, as I mentioned, you'd have trouble
getting your money. Morgan Stanley buys microsoft for you. You own microsoft. If Morgan Stanley goes under, you still own microsoft. The only way
you'd wind up with nothing under a failed Morgan Stanley would be if they were producing phony documents and they never bought your stock. Then
they would be doing what Madoff did.

That is not the case here.

The other thing to note is that many cash accounts at houses like Morgan Stanley have insurance coverage, up to a certain amount so there's added
protection but, as previously mentioned, your cash is not mixed with their cash and, in the event they go under, and your cash is gone, then you have
a situation where they didn't lose your money, they outright stole it.

Not the case here.

If you want to fear a collapse of a bank, feel free to do so but you should fully understand the impact on the individual accounts before you foster
an atmosphere of unwarranted fear.

And, since y'all are so concerned about losing your money, here's a nice tidbit regarding banks:

No depositor has ever lost a penny of insured deposits since the FDIC was created in 1933.

Note, this only applies to FDIC insured accounts. Investment banks have different insurance on the cash accounts. When Lehman collapsed there were
cases of money market funds being worth slightly less than a dollar per share (the normal value).

This content community relies on user-generated content from our member contributors. The opinions of our members are not those of site ownership who maintains strict editorial agnosticism and simply provides a collaborative venue for free expression.